nablator > 16-11-2022, 12:01 PM
ReneZ > 16-11-2022, 01:34 PM
pfeaster > 16-11-2022, 03:09 PM
(16-11-2022, 12:01 PM)nablator Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Because of the random choice of space insertion in transliterations, most statistics on words are unreliable.
MarcoP > 16-11-2022, 04:44 PM
(16-11-2022, 03:09 PM)pfeaster Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Take [cheey], which has 133 tokens in its gallows-less form. If we limit ourselves to discrete words, we have:
[kcheey] 3 and [tcheey] 6
[cKheey] 10 and [cTheey] 13
[chkeey] 13 and [chteey] 1
[chekey] 5 and [chetey] 4
[cheeky] 21 and [cheety] 3
*[cheeyk] 0 and *[cheeyt] 0
The only place in [cheey] where we never find a gallows inserted to form a discrete word is at the very end.
But we do find the hapax legomena [cheeykam] and [cheeytal] -- which is what we might expect if the insertion of a gallows had filled in a space in [cheey.am] and [cheey.al]. We also find:
[cheey.k*] 6 and [cheey.t*] 4
[cheey,k*] 4 and [cheey,t*] 1
-- in which a following gallows has been attached in transcription to the next word, with fully half (5/10) of such cases being flagged as ambiguous (with comma breaks). Maybe these latter cases look like nablator's examples.
All of which could be taken to suggest that these various words [kcheey], [cKheey], [chkeey], and so forth might be better analyzed as a consistent [cheey] with a gallows inserted at different points (or "floating" from place to place?) than in terms of a word morphology built around [k] or [t] occupying a consistent "core"-type slot.
Emma May Smith > 16-11-2022, 04:46 PM
nablator > 16-11-2022, 05:07 PM
(16-11-2022, 03:09 PM)pfeaster Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.The only place in [cheey] where we never find a gallows inserted to form a discrete word is at the very end.
MichelleL11 > 16-11-2022, 05:55 PM
(16-11-2022, 03:09 PM)pfeaster Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.(16-11-2022, 12:01 PM)nablator Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Because of the random choice of space insertion in transliterations, most statistics on words are unreliable.
This observation might account for one pattern I've just been trying to look into over the past couple days -- one that might also be referred to as "floating gallows," but in another sense.
Taking the hypothesis that gallows aren't an inherent part of words, but are only added to words, I tried comparing the statistics for all words containing [k] and [t] against the statistics for the same words without them (in paragraphic text only, leaving out labels, etc.).
Sometimes a reasonably common word with [k] or [t] doesn't have an attested counterpart without the gallows. For example, there are no tokens of [qoey], [qochdy], [ool], [oey], [yeey], or [chchey]. That could be a problem for the hypothesis.
On the other hand, there are sometimes also curiously complete sets of words in which a gallows can be found inserted at every point in a relatively common gallows-less word -- almost.
pfeaster > 16-11-2022, 07:48 PM
(16-11-2022, 04:46 PM)Emma May Smith Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Patrick, while that's an interesting observation, what would we do with words like [cheokey] or [chotey]? Removing the gallows would result in [cheoey] and [choey], neither of which exist.
(16-11-2022, 04:46 PM)Emma May Smith Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.I think that the gaps would be difficult to explain as it wouldn't apply to a single word, but to a whole series:
[kcheoey] 1 and [tchoey] 0
[ckheoey] 0 and [cthoey] 0
[chkeoey] 0 and [chtoey] 0
[chekoey] 0 and [chotey] 9
[cheokey] 3 and [choety] 1
[cheoeky] 0 and [choeyt] 0
[cheoeyk] 0
We would be faced with a situation where a gallows could insert itself into a word in one of seven or six slots, but chooses the same slot 75% to 90% of the time.
Hermes777 > 16-11-2022, 08:27 PM
Emma May Smith > 16-11-2022, 08:52 PM
(16-11-2022, 07:48 PM)pfeaster Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.What I was hoping to dig into was the question of whether any discernable "rules" of gallows insertion would emerge out of these statistics. Maybe [cheey] is unusually flexible. But [chedy], for example, is less so -- we can find [kchedy], [cKhedy], and [chkedy] (and [t] equivalents), but inserting a gallows to either side of the [d] seems dispreferred, except for a single token of [chedty]. The words [chey] and [chdy] follow a similar pattern: for [chey] we have [kchey], [cKhey], [chkey], [cheky] (and [t] equivalents); but for [chdy] we have only [kchdy] and [cKhdy] (and [t] equivalents). When the combination [oe] appears in a word, it looks as though a gallows might be drawn preferentially to the spot between them, and also to be especially likely to appear: hence, possibly, the preference for [cheokey] and [chotey], and also for [qokeedy] (291 tokens) as opposed to [qoekedy] (2 tokens) or [qoeedy] (18 tokens). Whether this kind of analysis will turn out to have any advantage over other ones, I don't think I'm yet in any position to say, but I thought it could be worth a try.